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Andrea Lorenzo Capussela


Andrea Lorenzo Capussela is the author of The Political Economy of Italy’s Decline, Declino Italia and State-Building in Kosovo. He is a visiting fellow at the London School of Economics and writes for Le Grand Continent, Domani and, occasionally, the Financial Times.

Andrea Lorenzo Capussela

At Italy’s dark heart: the weak rule of law

Andrea Lorenzo Capussela 10th September 2024

Giorgia Meloni’s government is squandering a golden opportunity to reverse Italy’s economic decline.

The Liberal Conception Of ‘Freedom’ Is Incapable Of Addressing The Problems Of Contemporary Capitalism

Andrea Lorenzo Capussela 13th November 2018

In a forthcoming book, Branko Milanović identifies four ‘troublesome features’ in ‘meritocratic liberal capitalism’ (while retaining full responsibility for these very tentative remarks, I would like to thank Branko Milanović for his feedback on them). These are the rising share of capital income in total income, which undermines meritocracy; the very high concentration of capital income, which […]

Illegality And Italy’s New Government

Andrea Lorenzo Capussela 18th July 2018

One trait that distinguishes Italy from her Western peers is the gravity and coexistence of corruption, tax evasion, and organised crime. One encouraging trait of the new governing coalition, among many concerning ones, is its pledge to fight those criminal phenomena. But one member of it, the League, was often involved in corruption scandals, has […]

Italy’s Crisis: Democracy And The Euro

Andrea Lorenzo Capussela 6th June 2018

The critiques Many commentators have argued that President Sergio Mattarella’s decisions of May 28 wounded Italy’s democracy and were damaging or counterproductive (e.g., most interestingly Jan Zielonka, on this site, and, more radically, Yanis Varoufakis; and, on Twitter, in alphabetic order, Paul Krugman, Branko Milanovic, Ann Pettifor, Helen Thompson). I disagree with the first argument […]

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Spring Issues

The Spring issue of The Progressive Post is out!


Since President Trump’s inauguration, the US – hitherto the cornerstone of Western security – is destabilising the world order it helped to build. The US security umbrella is apparently closing on Europe, Ukraine finds itself less and less protected, and the traditional defender of free trade is now shutting the door to foreign goods, sending stock markets on a rollercoaster. How will the European Union respond to this dramatic landscape change? .


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